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Beth-El Zedeck Temple, originally known as Beth-El Temple, is a historic synagogue located in the Mapleton-Fall Creek neighborhood in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States. The building was completed in 1924, and was originally home to Congregation Beth-El before merging with the Ohev Zedeck congregation in 1928. [ 2 ]
The Tenth Street Temple, designed by Vonnegut & Bohn, architects, was a domed building in an eclectic Neoclassical style, [5] which was burned and demolished in 1975. [6] Rabbi Isaac Meyer Wise led the congregation at that time. The congregation's current building at 6501 North Meridian Street was completed in 1958, [3] in the Modernist style ...
Jericho Jewish Center, Jericho; Temple Emanu-El, Long Beach; Reconstructionist Synagogue of the North Shore, Plandome; Temple Beth Israel, Port Washington; Temple Adas Israel, Sag Harbor; Congregation Aish Kodesh, Woodmere; In Manhattan. Meserich Synagogue, East Village; Sixth Street Community Synagogue, East Village
A woman was arrested early Saturday for allegedly driving a car into an Indianapolis building associated with Black Hebrew Israelites.
Temple Israel is a historic former Reform Jewish synagogue, located at Lafayette, Tippecanoe County, Indiana, in the United States. Its 1867 building is one of the oldest synagogue buildings in the United States. [3] Deconsecrated as a synagogue in 1969, the most recent use of the building was as a Unitarian church.
This is a list of Reform synagogues around the world. [1] Reform/Progressive synagogues are affiliated with organizations that are part of the World Union for Progressive Judaism. [2]
Greater Wenatchee Jewish Community (Wenatchee, Washington. Described by the Washington State Jewish Historical Society (WSJHS) as "a quasi-Reform temple," it was Seattle's first congregation (1889) and synagogue (1892) [1]: 10–11 Kavana Cooperative, Seattle
Ahavas Shalom Reform Temple (originally, Ahavath Scholom, also Ahavath Sholom, "Lovers of Peace" or "Peace Loving") [2] [a]) is an historic former Reform Jewish synagogue building located at 503 Main Street, in Ligonier, Noble County, Indiana, in the United States.